AB 70-D1
The AB 70-D1 '' was a cluster bomb dispenser used by the Luftwaffe during World War II.
Design
Weapons container
The AB 70-D1 contained fifty high-explosive fragmentation sub-munitions, was cylindrical in shape and was made of cast steel. The body was of clamshell design with an upper and lower half with tail fins that was hinged at the rear of the container. The base and head of the container were internally threaded and the base of the container had a suspension lug and the nose had a steel closing plug with a fuze.The container could be suspended either vertically or horizontally within a bomb bay or horizontally from a hard point beneath the fuselage or wing of an aircraft. Attached to the suspension lug there was a cord tied to a split ring which attached to a parachute. When the bomb was dropped the parachute deployed which set off a friction igniter that threaded into the steel closing plug. The closing plug was sheared by the explosion of a small detonator the case opened and the bombs fell out. German documentation states that the AB 70-D1 is not entirely safe in transport and aircraft are not permitted to land with unused AB 70-D1 containers. It is also impossible to jettison the AB 70-D1 in a safe unused state for recovery and the minimum height of bomb release was.